Archive for December, 2007

Kudos

Posted on December 30th, 2007

Kudos

To the Sunday News for publishing “Remembering Dick and Molly” as an “In My Opinion” column. Several persons contributed to the article but, for various reasons and by their choice, NewsLanc’s president Robert Edwin Field was designated as author. “Remembering Dick and Molly” can be read at at this URL.

Really?

Posted on December 25th, 2007

Really?

State Senator Gib Armstrong as reported in the Dec. 10 New Era: “In today’s environment people think twice about getting into public office,” he said. “There are a lot of people now, with the Internet and bloggers, who try to destroy anybody on any issue. They don’t care. That’s just the way it is. I can live through that and run a campaign, but it’s not fair to my wife, and it’s not fair to my family.”

WATCHDOG: Apparently Armstrong does not like to have the public spotlight on his performance and much prefers to deal with the monopoly Lancaster Newspapers rather than receive suggestions and criticisms from concerned citizens. It’s encouraging that NewsLanc and local blogs are having their desired effect.

Kudos

Posted on December 16th, 2007

Kudos

To the Sunday News for its Dec. 16th “‘Lords’ of the City” front page exposé and other related articles about the inability of the City of Lancaster to enforce Code Regulations for rental properties and the resulting dire consequences. NewsLanc will soon suggest corrective measures that work well elsewhere for similar municipalities.

COMMENTARY: Budapest vs. Lancaster: Good Planning vs. No Planning

Posted on December 12th, 2007

A decade ago, McCaskey graduate and later real estate developer Richard Field and his father visited the planning office of District 9 in Budapest, Hungary. They were shown a detailed plan comprising dozens of blocks describing precisely which buildings were to be razed, which renovated, the type of new construction to take place in designated locations, proposed pedestrian pathways, street enhancements, new green areas, and improvements to existing parks.

At the time of the visit, the neighborhood consisted of many run down buildings, dingy streets, trashed littered empty lots, and buildings teeming with squatters.

When Field examined the detailed redevelopment plans, he recognized the direction, vision, and commitment of local officials. Over time, Field and his associates acquired four sites on which they developed condominiums consisting of a couple hundred flats with indoor parking and ground level shops.

Today when Field looks out from his eighth floor balcony, he sees that plan fully realized. Consequently, the district has become one of the most fashionable and sought after sections of Budapest and is experiencing rapidly rising real estate values.

In contrast, a developer interested in building similar residential condominiums in downtown Lancaster would have a very different experience. There is no comparable plan for orderly development. A prospective builder or apartment purchaser can only see what exists now; not know what will occur later.

Furthermore, prospective developers would be hard pressed to detect much civic interest in facilitating a downtown housing trend or appreciation of the resulting gentrification that would spread to currently distressed nearby neighborhoods.

Grim evidence of this apparent disconnect was the choice of the Watt & Shand site for the convention center project with no apparent recognition that such a massive commercial structure would block the logical and orderly spread to the south of housing for empty nesters and young professionals. Instead of asking what can be done to trigger downtown gentrification, concentration was on what could be done with the Watt & Shand site.

Most recent downtown residential activity has concentrated on converting deserted industrial and retail buildings, wherever they might be located, into loft type residential units. This indeed is progress, but hardly sufficient in itself.

Planning requires expertise and consensus, not gimmicks such as trolley cars. And making what is planned actually happen requires education of decision makers and the public, investments in improving streets and parks, federal and state subsidies, and leadership.

To lead effectively, one must know where one is going. Planning provides direction.

Isn’t Winning Enough?

Posted on December 3rd, 2007

Isn’t Winning Enough?

The Sunday News well knows how unfairly County Commissioners Dick Shellenberger and Molly Henderson were treated by the monopoly newspapers on the issue of the convention center project and the grand jury report. Yet it persists in publishing “Days left in terms of County Commissioners Shellenberger and Henderson” in each edition. The Sunday News calls for the community to put division behind pertaining to the controversial project and yet continues, perhaps in projecting its own guilt onto the commissioners, to denigrate honorable public servants. This conduct is unworthy of the editor.

Bad Taste

Posted on December 1st, 2007

Bad Taste

On Nov. 30th, that bastion of public morality, the New Era, owned by the paragon of virtue the monopoly Lancaster Newspapers, Inc., (partner in the greatest rip off in Lancaster’s history) published the photo of a sad looking woman accused of offering to perform an act of prostitution for an ‘undercover’ detective who patronized a massage parlor. At a time of frequent murders, bank robberies and when the elderly are swindled out of their life’s savings, it is comforting to know that Rick Gray’s “finest” are ‘hot’ on the trail of victimless vice.

More News

Credo

"....I have never made it a consideration whether the subject was popular or unpopular, but whether it was right or wrong; for that which is right will become popular, and that which is wrong, though by mistake it may obtain the cry or fashion of the day, will soon lose the power of delusion, and sink into disesteem." Thomas Paine, Common Sense, on "Financing the War", March 5, 1782

Blog Archives

Categories

LGH Series

How US Health Care stacks up Against Others

How US Health Care stacks up Against Others

The World Health Organization ranked health care quality by countries.  ...

Taxation without representation is…LGH

“In economics, a monopoly exists when a specific individual or ...

Convention Center Series

An Authority unchecked and unchallenged

An Authority unchecked and unchallenged

Forty-fifth in a series by Christiaan Hart-Nibbrig “These municipal authorities are ...

Time line for LCCCA Project

Forty-fourth in a series by Christiaan A. Hart Nibbrig The Lancaster ...

Santa Monica Reporter

The Kids Are All Right, and Schmucks

The Kids Are All Right, and Schmucks

By Dan Cohen, Santa Monica Reporter The mediocre performance of several ...

The conception of Inception

By Dan Cohen, Santa Monica Reporter Although it aspires to more, ...